Nobody likes when the big guy squashes the little guy (well, maybe the big guy does), and in cases where it's black and white we should all rally the flag and support the rights of those who need it. But there are more shades of gray to every story, and certainly to this one.
If you knew more about the details and the history of the players, you might not be so quick to jump onto one side or the other. On Sun, Apr 29, 2012 at 11:44 AM, Eric Lampi <[email protected]> wrote: > Sounds like he's within his rights to protect his property, and you're not > going to beat a corporation like Disney by being Mr. Nice-guy. I think it's > important to protect the small developer who's taken it to the point where > they have a tool that people will pay for. Thiago, Helge, Holger, Eric > Mootz, just to name a few, do us a great service and it's not cool for a > company to step on them because they don't have a legal department. Would > Disney try that with some software tool that Apple invented? No, because > they'd get sued into the next century and they know it. > > Good for him, I hope it works out. > > Eric >

